Modes Manners Of The Nineteenth Century As Represented In The Pictures And Engravings By The Time Volume 2
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The Politics and Art of John L. Stoddard
Author | : Michaelene Cox |
Publisher | : Lexington Books |
Total Pages | : 185 |
Release | : 2015-01-16 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : 0739188712 |
This book is a historical and critical assessment of contributions by American writer and lecturer John Lawson Stoddard (1850-1931). It is the first scholarly effort to provide visual and literary analyses of his illustrated travel works and political writings. It claims that Stoddard was a principle engine behind movements toward transforming tourism into a growing consumer culture, democratizing liberal arts education, and fueling anti-WWI campaigns. By the late 1870s, John Lawson Stoddard had played a major role in transforming the aristocratic Grand Tour into a mass cultural phenomenon. His photographs and accompanying public lectures on distant places and peoples caught the attention of decision makers in the U.S. government, but perhaps more importantly, his images and text were imprinted in the minds of millions of audience members. This book suggests how critical approaches borrowed from the interdisciplinary literature of visual culture are helpful in assessing the imagery and identity of a nineteenth-century American travel lecturer and author. It uncovers buried aspects of the personal and public life of Stoddard, and reveals his significant contributions to American political and social history.
The Spectator
Author | : |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 1306 |
Release | : 1842 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : |
A weekly review of politics, literature, theology, and art.
Virginia Woolf’s Unwritten Histories
Author | : Anne Besnault |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 235 |
Release | : 2021-11-04 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1000461882 |
Virginia Woolf’s Unwritten Histories explores the interrelatedness of Woolf’s modernism, feminism and her understanding of history as a site of knowledge and a writing practice that enabled her to negotiate her heritage, to find her place among the moderns as a female artist and intellectual, and to elaborate her poetics of the "new": not as radical rupture but as the result of a process of unwriting and rewriting "traditional" historiographical orthodoxies. Its central argument is that unless we comprehend the genealogy of Woolf’s historical thought and the complexity of its lineage, we cannot fully grasp the innovative thrust of her attempt to "think back through our mothers." Bringing together canonical texts such as Orlando (1928), A Room of One’s Own (1929), Three Guineas (1938) or Between the Acts (1941) and under-researched ones — among which stand Woolf’s essays on historians and reviews of history books and her pieces on literary history and nineteenth-century women’s literature — this book argues that Woolf’s textual "conversations" with nineteenth-century writers, historians and critics, many of which remain unexplored, are interwoven with her historiographical poiesis and constitute the groundwork for her alternative histories and literary histories: "unwritten," open-textured, unacademic and polemical counter-narratives that keep track of the past and engage politically with the future.
Our Library
Author | : Library Association (Portland, Or.) |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 838 |
Release | : 1910 |
Genre | : Classified catalogs (Dewey decimal) |
ISBN | : |